Gal. 6:11-18 * Matt. 6:24f
Study
of Scripture on the Epistle
Gal. 6:11-18
It may well be that Saint Paul ’s words in this
Sunday’s portion of his Epistle to the churches of Galatia , sound a bit strange. All
of this talk about circumcision contrasted against the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and people “glorying”- that is, in modern English, boasting- about the
“flesh” of these Christians, may well confuse a new Bible reader. It can lead
to mistaken ideas. The first mistaken idea is that whatever Saint Paul was talking about cannot be
relevant to modern people. The second mistaken idea is that this provides a
basis for an anti-Semitic interpretation of scripture. Another mistaken idea
would be we have no need for the authority and teaching of the Church.
In fact, let me deal with this third mistake. In so doing, I will have already
answered the others. Since we speak in the Creeds of the Catholic Church and of
the Catholic Faith, which we believe, we are stuck with the Catholic
Tradition- and thank God we are. The Nicene (/Constantinopolitan) Creed
says, “I believe One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church .”
Yes, we do believe in the Church, because Christ Himself founded it and is its
Head. But, in this great Creed you say I believe the Church; I believe what it
teaches.
The scripture, without solid teaching of what it means, can be taken captive by
any kook, fraud or con-man. So, when we speak of the Catholic Tradition we must
go back to the ancient times, those early centuries when the Church was under
persecution, or just emerging from persecution. We are saying that we believe
what Christ promised, namely that the Spirit of Truth would guide the Apostles
into all truth (John 16:13). And, as that promise of Christ applies to this
passage from Galatians, the young Church first had to deal with a heresy that
came about so early in its history that we see it addressed by St. Paul . When the apostles and elders
gathered in Jerusalem ,
they also, with complete unanimity, addressed and refuted it (Acts chapter
fifteen). This ancient heresy taught that, in order to be saved, a Gentile who
converts to Christianity must be circumcised and live by all of the 613
commandments of the Law of Moses.
Trendy writers have sold the idea that some controversy raged over what to do
with Gentiles converts. They sell the notion that this alleged controversy
raged for years, even among the Apostles, pitting Paul against James, and maybe
against Peter. They insist that we may infer, from this invented story of
theirs, that important questions can go unresolved and debated within the
Church for extended years before the Spirit leads us to a right conclusion.
They use their false and contrived reading of the New Testament to justify new
and outrageous ideas (including women's ordination and same sex blessings,
etc.).
But, that tale of a raging and prolonged controversy is pure fiction; and so,
like the future, it can teach us no lessons. What we really see in the New
Testament is that the Proto-Council in Jerusalem
was unanimous in its conclusion, without disagreement among the Apostles and
the Elders. At the Council they unanimously affirmed the earlier decision
recorded in the eleventh chapter of Acts, when they all agreed with Saint Peter
that he had been right to baptize the new Gentile converts without circumcising
them; because when the Holy Spirit came upon the Gentiles, gathered that day in
the house of Cornelius, God made no distinction between Jew and Gentile. The
immediate and unanimous Apostolic conclusion had been, at that time, “then hath
God granted the Gentiles repentance unto life (Acts 11;18).” So, when a new teaching
– a heresy- arose, as Gentile Christians were troubled by unauthorized teachers
who wanted them to be circumcised and to keep the Law, Saint Paul was in
complete agreement with Saint James, and with Saint Peter, and with all the
Apostles, that the Tradition of the Church (new as that Tradition was, but
established nonetheless) had to be defended. What Saint Peter had learned years
before when Gentiles first converted to Christ, and what his fellow Apostles
affirmed without argument (if you simply read the record in the Book of Acts),
was the very same teaching proclaimed by Saint Paul, and the same teaching that
the Council in Jerusalem upheld for all of the churches everywhere. In short,
the New Testament does not show a controversy among the Apostles, but rather
that they were in complete unity, agreeing among themselves concerning what it
was that the Holy Spirit had revealed. And so, in the New Testament we see the
Church teaching the content of Apostolic witness.
What does this mean for you? It means that what the Church has always taught
since its earliest days, as recorded in Scripture, is to be believed. In this
case, believe and know that you cannot save yourself by your own power. That
first heresy, that we are saved by circumcision (of the males) and by keeping
the 613 commandments, suggests that we have the power to save ourselves without
God’s help--that we can pull ourselves up to Heaven by our own bootstraps. A
few centuries later, this same idea would reappear in another form from Britain ’s very
own heretic, a fellow named Pelagius. Pelagius taught that we can, without
God’s grace, live holy lives simply by our own will power; that Christ came
merely to be our example. The man who worked hardest to refute the heresy of
Pelagianism was Saint Augustine .
He picked up the teaching of the Apostles back in the first Century, that we
cannot save ourselves by our own power; that we need the grace of God.
Today we can speak of the heresies of the Judaizers and of the Pelagians with
ease. But, think of what it meant for people back then to hear such teaching.
What if Christ had come only to be the example of perfection? Would not we be
without hope? We should all know about the problem of sin and death. What I
know about sin I did not need to learn in Seminary. I had the subject pretty
well mastered without reading a text book on it. Death is the flip side, a part
of the problem of sin; sin and death are two sides of one coin. One thing I do
not need is a perfect example to make the sting of my condemnation worse. I
need a Savior, both to rescue me from the reality of guilt (whether I have the
good sense to feel guilt, or not), and to heal my fallen soul of its
waywardness. Jesus the Good Example cannot save me; Jesus Christ, the Word made
flesh, the Lord and Savior Who is One with the Father, forever God even as He
takes into His own Person our human nature and redeems it, and by grace
perfects it, can and does save me. And, no one else can; certainly I cannot
save myself. In Christ, however, no longer am I bound for destruction, for an
eternity of death without God. Rather, forgiveness is extended, along with
grace and power by the Holy Spirit to be transformed, right up until that day
when we are made partakers of the Divine Nature (II Pet. 1:4) because the One
Who as God was made man, gives us even this very grace.
So, I trust you see that Saint Paul ’s
words are very relevant to you.
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